Incoming Deputy Prime Minister Julia Gillard says the new Labor Cabinet will hold talks within three weeks to kickstart two planks of Labor's education policy.

The new Government will be sworn in tomorrow, and later in the week Cabinet will discuss plans to ensure every high school student from year nine to 12 has access to a computer.

The education policy will fall under Ms Gillard's 'super portfolio' covering education, employment and workplace relations, and she says there will be fast progress on Labor's education plans.

"The first Cabinet meeting will consider a Cabinet submission about our computers in schools policy and the second cabinet meeting before Christmas will start work on our trades in schools policy," she said.

"Two big promises for the education revolution will have their work start before Christmas."

But Ms Gillard says Labor's overhaul of the Coalition's industrial relations laws may not be fully rolled out until the middle of next year.

She says Labor will split its overhaul of the Coalition's industrial relations laws into two rounds of legislation, with the first bill covering the phase-out of Australian Workplace Agreements (AWAs) to be ready for the opening of Parliament.

But the second round of legislation, including changes to unfair dismissal laws, will take months to draft and may not reach Parliament until the middle of next year.

Ms Gillard says policy decisions connected with the bill to abolish AWAs will go to cabinet before Christmas.

"Anybody who's read our policy plans would know that the transition bill was always going to be about ending Australian Workplace Agreements," she said.

"There of course will be a second substantial piece of legislation which will deliver on the rest of our promises, including our promise to ensure that there is a simple unfair dismissal system."

The Coalition will keep control of the Senate until next July but Ms Gillard has challenged Liberal and Nationals politicians to support the new laws.

"This wasn't a marginal part of the last election campaign, it was a key part of the election campaign, so we'd ask for the will of the Australian people to be honoured," she told Channel Ten.

"We'd also ask the Liberal Party and the National Party, do they stand by award-stripping AWAs? Do they stand by good workers being sacked unfairly?"

In a special episode of The Drum devoted entirely to the controversy surrounding the continued booing of AFL Indigenous football star Adam Goodes, an all Indigenous panel tells of the pain of racism and the damage it causes.